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See U Next Tuesday You Monster

Posted: 02/14/2012 8:00 am

There's a shame in me that I can only face in moments of my deepest truth. It's confronting a monster inside vicious and treacherous and wholly evil, one who waits for me in the dark recesses of my being, who will only reach out and touch if I am strong enough to fight it. Always, I must initiate contact, but then after that, it's all about the monster.

The monster of me is my own fear of intimacy, and the monster was born from the packages of Valentine's Day cards forced upon me as a third and fourth grader, ages eight and nine, so therefore in the very thick of childhood, that seemingly endless period between recognition of the wonder of being alive and then realizing that disappointment is a major part of that experience and then ending with your period, when the fun/not fun really starts.

At that age you really don't want anyone to see you, or maybe it was just me, but if I could be swept under rugs, it would have been a great relief. Existential crisis isn't what children are supposed to have, but I had it, like a cold that never went away, infecting and reinfecting my system, the virus growing alongside me into the monster, coming to be my exact height and weight. The forced giving of these valentines was a way to feed the monster, because the monster thrived on chaos and insecurity, psychic pain and doubt, fear and rejection and betrayal. This is what the monster brought to school in a wrinkled paper bag. This is what the monster was served in the cafeteria on Valentine's Day, along with the chalky candy hearts and chocolate kisses.

There were never enough cards in the package to give everyone, and so there were always going to be some left out, and the possibility of buying an extra set was out of the question for struggling immigrant families like my own. At least my mother saw the importance of buying one of these packages in an attempt to make me seem like slightly less of the freak that I was, that I appeared to other children, but the fact that I didn't have enough to go fully around threw my inadequacy into relief. I had to pick the people I cared for to give cards to, and this was the original wounding, for to reveal my own heart at that time was dangerous and vile, an exposure that felt intolerable. To show my affection was to flash an honesty that once seen, could never be unseen, and it kept me up at night with worry and dread.

When you don't have friends and you have to give your not-friends cards that denote love and ardor and write their names on a paper that you would rather curse than bless and then walk around during class handing these insincere and inexplicable envelopes out in a mock baby version of an adult cocktail party, everyone out of their desks and crossing their arms and standing around, it causes problems later in life, in particular, with love.

When I gave a girl a card, it was the worst, because I knew I had to do it in the most blank way possible, as if I was giving the card under doctors orders or under the gun or at least throw it at her as if to say, "this is out of my hands." Kids know when there's something about you that is different. They smell it and sense it and it sickens them because they recognize it in themselves and if they don't attack someone will soon do it to them. Bullying starts, as it is a form of self-hatred expressed outward, and since the cruelty towards ourselves we are capable of knows no bounds, it can be bad. Insanely so.

Lies told about me from the giving of Valentine's cards were common.

Once, I gave a Valentine to a girl I did have a deep awareness of. I couldn't go so far as to say I had a crush, because that would make my feelings seem like they were pleasant. Her name started with a 'j.' They always seem to have 'j' names. J could sense a temperature change whenever I came around her desk. J enjoyed that power. I gave j a card and she told the rest of the class that I had leaned in to ask for a kiss on the cheek and then turned my head fast to trick her into kissing me on the mouth. I was embarrassed beyond belief that she would spread this absolute lie and that everyone totally bought it, easily visualizing me pulling a common child molester's trick, a pedophile shell game, three card Nonce-y. Fuck you j. I hope you are dead now. you just might be. We are all getting to that age.

The monster was pleased. The monster had a growth spurt every year about this time. The monster, made of red paper hearts and cut outs of bubbly lace and doilies, snails and whales and puppydog tails, equal rights and spice and everything nice. However those rhymes go, they were all about the monster.

Because of the monster, and because of those cards, I can't love without tremendous duress and medication and processing and counseling and unavailable people and fights all night for no good reason and so of course insomnia. Because of the monster and because of those cards, when I send a text that may not even be romantic in nature, just somehow plainly nakedly affectionate, and I don't get a response, I feel as if the world is ending. Because of the monster, and because of those cards, I am me, and that doesn't feel so great sometimes.

A NOTE FROM HUFFPOST VALENTINE'S DAY EDITORS LINDSAY AND TODD, WHO BROKE UP THIS MORNING: We're not letting today's personal issues affect the quality content we bring you every Valentine's Day! Still, if you want to know exactly how Todd Lindsay messed up, we are keeping a liveblog.

 
There's a shame in me that I can only face in moments of my deepest truth. It's confronting a monster inside vicious and treacherous and wholly evil, one who waits for me in the dark recesses of my be...
There's a shame in me that I can only face in moments of my deepest truth. It's confronting a monster inside vicious and treacherous and wholly evil, one who waits for me in the dark recesses of my be...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kevin Jewell
07:40 PM on 03/05/2012
Thank you, those damn cards made winter's a drudge after Christmas, the loathing I had of those that taunted, bullied and outed me from kindergarten on, I tried to make myself sick to skip the party...strange I loved decorating, the red hearts, the paper lace hearts, the cherubs, but those cards gave me the heebie jeebies, I spent two different years in total withdrawal from classmates just to avoid the pain, the seclusion was ecstatic relief from the snickers and jibes. I hated school and was so relieved to move away to college, but it wasn't far enough, I found home in France, being hated for being an American is such emotional release from being hated for being gay. Your revives my strength through laughter, thank you Margaret.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sara Williams
10:19 PM on 02/19/2012
Yeah, it's funny, if I didn't have enough Valentine's Day cards to give out as a kid, I wouldn't have been able to do it at all. Having to pick and chose would mean some people would be "chosen," and they would meet that with shock, laughter and disgust. I also hated giving out the cards, but some part of me wanted to have fun and enjoy the holiday like everyone else, so I handed out cards to people who taunted me every hour of every school day. And people wonder how anyone becomes bitter and sarcastic as an adult? *lol*
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southingtonian
"I'm a Capricorn and you can't make me do sh*t.."
05:44 AM on 02/19/2012
Aspergers. Though my difficulties come from another source, I can identify with the prison you describe. I was found by an amazingly accepting and tolerant fellow, who, without related education, turned the key to let me out. I hope you find release, too.
11:52 PM on 02/15/2012
I understand the intent of the post, and I relate to it. I'm not gay and I don't think you have to be in order to understand it and to have shared a similar experience. I thought it was very well written and fascinating to read. Insecurity comes from many places and has a tremendous impact on everyday life even decades later. Thank you for sharing.
08:04 PM on 02/15/2012
I can understand your stress since I was a Jewish child, Eastern-European, in a community of all Anglo-Saxon and French descendants. My Russian immigrant parents spoke accented English and cautioned me to be low-profile, not to attract attention ...in order to be safe, no pogroms. I described it as I wished the school floor would open and let me sink into it! To disappear, of course. I don't recall any Valentine Day activities; everyday life was enough! I moved across the country after high school and never have visited my "home" town. I do correspond, by email, with a fellow graduate, of German descent, who was oblivious to my discomfort, so I may have been overly sensitive in my reactions...........
10:36 AM on 02/15/2012
Kids senses are amazing/terrible. I am very feminine-looking so I thought no one would know what was really going on inside my head. I usually had a boyfriend, too. Wrong! On a high school trip, the other three girls (my "friends") were having an argument about who would have to share a bed with me, as if I were planning a midnight attack on them or something (I wasn't). I felt tortured and outed on that trip. To this day, many years (decades!) later, I have no idea how they sensed my "difference."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jeff Lassiter
http://jefflassiter.com
10:02 AM on 02/15/2012
I dunno, I miss the days of getting Valentine's Cards in school. Only because it's the last time anyone gave me one lol
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sallybutt45
To thine own self be true.
03:10 AM on 02/15/2012
I gave the least popular kids 2 valentines each. I would sign my name to one and d a fancy question mark on the second. I don't know to this day if it was a good thing to do or not. I hope I didn't give anybody anxiety.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rosie Cosens
10:59 AM on 02/19/2012
I seem to remember doing something similiar. I never felt like I was a popular kid but looking back, I know I was surrounded by kids at school. It was at home I was the unpopular kid.
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ss1964
0 Population Growth
02:27 AM on 02/15/2012
I have an idea in honor of our recently departed Whitney. Let us change it a "Greatest Love of All" day and each of us gives ourselves the valentine we all deserve. The world will become a better place. :)
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Billk29
Justified Ancient of Mu
12:05 AM on 02/15/2012
I remember the dreaded valentines day card ordeals well. We weren't forced to give cards but were free to give them to whomever we liked and each person had a little box we had to make and attach to our lockers or desk.
So you pick out a few people you liked,gave the cards and then at the end of the day you checked your box to see if anyone liked you.
I suppose the teachers thought it was a way to get kids out of their shells but it was fairly depressing for many.
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StopThePlanet
Outlaw stupidity and only outlaws will be stupid
09:53 PM on 02/14/2012
I think most intimacy issues result from how our parents relate to us and each other rather than being forced to engage in a Hallmark holiday tradition.
08:43 PM on 02/19/2012
I agree w/stoptheplanet. Your problem w/giving and receiving love and attention began before the valentine cards experience or you would not have reacted that way toward the situation. I suspect that, like me and many others, your parents did not train you to give and receive love. HoIw often r did they hold you in their laps and tell you that they loved you? Probably never, not often or not often enough. In my case, the only time I
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cowgrrl
Abnormal Psychologist
08:56 PM on 02/14/2012
did anyone else get the great article title?

thanks, cho
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GaryNOVA
Fear My Micro-bio!!!!!!!!
09:23 PM on 02/14/2012
yes
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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Cuyahoga
I asked Hank Williams, how lonely does it get ....
10:55 PM on 02/15/2012
You also think the "N" word is great? The title is (to me) offensive.
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cowgrrl
Abnormal Psychologist
07:52 PM on 02/19/2012
what n word? your scrambled implications are offensive. my question was based on remembering the slang of my daughter's college days, 20 years ago.

your head will explode any minute. your comment is transparent.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
fiLthyLiberaLdotcom
Yes, it's a website for liberals.
09:04 PM on 02/19/2012
Oh well.
George Picard
Send lawyers, guns and money
08:21 PM on 02/14/2012
I always worry about people who still haven't got over grade school.
07:10 PM on 02/14/2012
Thanks for sharing that Margaret, for remembering and giving a voice to those dynamics from your class... We appreciate you and send you LOTS of adult love and appreciation! :-)
04:54 PM on 02/14/2012
Surely this is tongue in cheek. Life scars because of Valentine Cards??? This is taking things to an extreme, isn't it? I was never the most popular, and therefore, never the one with the most card "souvineers." I got over it. I made do, and I came out on top because of it. Seems that Ms. Chou has come out on top of it also. Be thankful instead of regrettful.
11:04 PM on 02/14/2012
Are you serious? It was not about the cards, it was about being gay and being forced to give cards to people you didn't like and not being able to give cards to those that you truly did like. It was about how gay people were forced to hide who they were and are by activities designed to force children to conform to societal norms. When Margaret and i were young, there was no way for a gay child to be themselves without being ostracized and bullied. It wasn't about popularity and, sadly, not much has changed today.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
xenubarb
Nebulon V
02:02 PM on 02/19/2012
Protip: Margaret Cho is a comedienne.

Take it from there.